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Showing posts from 2009

Tintin and Leopold in Congo

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I am ashamed to admit that I only started reading the main francophone Belgian newspaper, Le Soir last week - and only due to the fact that it was available free in Exki, a common chain of lunch take-away food near the Commission. The Commission sandwiches are less appetizing after a while, and I haven't had much time for proper lunches lately due to trainings, choral concerts and actual work. The main topic in paper of last week's Thursday was the possible lawsuit against the publisher of Tintin, a.k.a the national symbol of Belgium. Bienvenu Mbutu Mdondondo, a Congolese student in Belgium accuses the album "Tintin in Congo" (known in Finnish as "Tintti Afrikassa") of racism and wants it to be transferred from bookshops to museum displays. He pressed charges in Belgium in 2007 - still pending - and in France in 2009 ( Figaro article on the issue in French). Mdondondo has proclaimed to be ready to go to the European Court of Human Rights, if needed. Previ

A-B-C - go!

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Time for another hobby post - last spring I wrote about my leisure activities in Finland ( in Finnish ), and I figured it would be time to do that in Belgium as well. Already six weeks (or seven?) have passed, and I have had plenty of time to slip into some kind of routine life rhythm. Dancing classes which I started promisingly in the beginning of October were annoyingly cut for some weeks because of a very persistent cough, which is now slowly fading away (I hope!). I have been able to go to flamenco classes for a few times, ballet and last Sunday also for a sabar class (Senegalese dance). A in the title of this post refers to another favourite sport of mine: the annual football league of the trainees is about to start. I was hesitant to join the team of our Directorate-General first, because it looked like I would be the only woman. In the end, that was a requirement for the team to play - to have at least one female player on the pitch during the whole match - and I'm now one o

Ah, les belges!

Warning: this post includes a lot of complaining about little things. I can't help but be constantly reminded by a friend of mine who also did an internship at the European Commission and later on worked there as a consultant for a few months. Samuli warned me: "On the face of it, everything seems to be working in Belgium. In reality, nothing works. Oh, so true. It is strange how differently and SLOWLY things function (or don't at all) in Belgium. Luckily I have been spared from taking care of all these practical things such as acquiring an internet connection, electricity and gas contracts or other, seemingly simple issues. In the end they are not that simple. Most of the things take one month. Having an internet connection? 4-6 weeks. Electricity? 2 weeks, at least, if the former tenant has called in his/her electricity contract in the apartment. Fridge? About 3 weeks. There are all these minor things that just don't make sense. For example, there is an automatic lau

Mood for Senegal

Two weeks in Brussels have passed by so quickly - it also means that already one tenth of my traineeship period at the European Commission has been completed. Have to say that I am still overwhelmed by the sheer magnitude of this whole machinery of European development cooperation. From next week on, I am supposed to "replace" for a month one of our office workers who is moving to a EU delegation in the Philippines. That includes functioning as the expert on conflict prevention issues: I know the basic content of SSR (security sector reform), LRRD (linking relief, rehabilitation and development), SALW (Small Arms and Light Weapons), and some other nice abbreviations I have learnt so far, but it does not make me an expert...we'll see if I need to do something else besides taking notes in meetings. After work there is the limited amount of freetime in Brussels, which I have mostly been spending with other stagiaires. On my own I have been going to cinema, and it has lately

Impressions bruxelloises

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I went to Brussels for a week, and what did I get? First, the thing I went there to look for: an apartment, or rather a room in which to stay for five months. I made the decision already after seeing four different rooms during the first two days. Finding an affordable (read: less than €500 with all charges) furnished room for a short-term rental in a city with thousands of trainees coming there every year was not THAT straight-forward. It was still a lot easier than finding a place to stay in Helsinki right now. Not my house, unfortunately, but an art nouveau house of an architect Victor Horta, now a museum in Ixelles (a part of Brussels where I'll live). I'll have a smallish room with two little roof windows, facing some gorgeous art nouveau buildings across the street, in a house with five other trainees of various institutions. I'd assume it's around 20 minutes by public transport to the EU Commission buildings, and perhaps 30 minutes by foot, if I'll ever feel

Kahvittelua ja uutisia.

Ah, mikä vapaus gradun palauttamisen jälkeen! Vaikka sen jälkeen onkin ollut kaikenlaista pientä hommaa - rahaa pitää kuitenkin hankkia jollakin tavoin - on ollut aikaa myös vain istuskella, lukea kirjoja ja juoda kahvia. Aion jatkaa tätä vielä elokuun toivottavasti pitkään jatkuvassa lämmössä, mutta suositukseni tähän mennessä kierretyistä kahviloista Helsingissä: Villipuutarha Kalliossa, Roskapankin vieressä. + epätavallinen sijainti + sisustus + suhteellisen laaja haudutetun teen valikoima, ruokia en vielä testannut - hintavahko (tee 3,50€) - epämukava tuoli, mutta sohvia oli myös tarjolla - usein täynnä Cafe Regatta + sijainti meren rannalla - voi katsella melojia ja Espoota + kahvikupin hinta: santsikupin ottaessa saa 5 senttiä takaisin, asia joka mainitaan aina kahvilaa esiteltäessä + erikoinen kokonaisuus kaikin puolin Sibelius-monumentin kupeessa - pieni valikoima syötäviä asioita - kitschin määrä on yliampuvaa jopa minulle Viinikahvila Viola + sijainti Kaisaniemen kasvitietee

Lessons learnt in the ex-Byzant

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I returned on Friday from an 11-day vacation to two of the most important cities of the Byzantine imperium: Istanbul and Thessaloniki. We spent first two days in Istanbul, then took a night train to Greece, to Thessaloniki, stayed there for two nights, then continued to a small village of Agios Panteleimon for a Greek wedding and returned back to Istanbul the same route for three more nights. Besides a lot of sightseeing - a dozen of Byzantine red brick churches, ruins, castles, half a dozen of mosques and some more ruins - and countless matches of backgammon, we indulged ourselves with delicious (and sometimes weird) food, drank refreshing white wine, shots of ouzo/raki (especially at the wedding!) and on the Turkish side at least a few glasses of excellent tea every day. Yummie Turkish tea in Pierre Loti café in Eyüp, Istanbul. But what would traveling be without learning things? I was happy to notice that my learning skills had not been totally destroyed by thesis-writing. After two

Harrastelua.

Blogissa on ollut hiljaista, kuten aina silloin kun olen Suomessa. Vähemmän kirjoittamista, enemmän tekemistä vapaa-ajalla ehkäpä? Tänä keväänä olen voinut syyttää lisäksi gradua ajan puutteesta. Ei, se ei ole vielä valmis. Mutta melkein! Kun yritin miettiä, mitä muuta olen tehnyt tänä keväänä kuin gradua, ei tullut oikein mitään mieleen. Tarkemmin ajateltuani tajusin, että olen sentään tehnyt muutakin kuin töitä ja gradua. Tämä kevät (ja tuleva kesä) on ollut parasta aikaa koskaan harrastusten osalta. Viikot ovat rytmittyneet harrastusten ympärille: maanantaisin Kassandra-kuoro , tiistaisin myös Kassandra ry:n järjestämät bollywood-tanssikurssi ja rumputunti, toukokuusta alkaen torstaisin jalkapallopeli, ja sunnuntaisin flamenco-tunti (ks. tammikuun postaus Olé ). Parina toukokuun viikonloppuna olen tanssinut kolmisen tuntia päivässä vierailevien afrotanssin opettajien kursseilla, joista tiedotetaan muun muassa mainiolla Afrotanssi -sivulla. Muina päivinä jaksaessaan on sitten voinut

Paul Auster and me.

During the last few months, I have read four books by Paul Auster, watched one of his movies and seen him twice. Might sound a bit obsessed. The reading part was because I figured New York City would be the best place to really immerse myself in his books, although the fourth one ( Book of Illusions , 2002) I got as a Christmas present when already in Finland. In September I began with Brooklyn Follies (2005), on sale for 4 dollars at the Strand Bookstore at the Union Square in New York. Then I continued with his latest novel, The Man in the Dark (2008) which I bought for 20 dollars at the UN: the benefits of the sold books, donated by Auster's publisher, went for the UN staff Development Fund to build a library (hopefully to get some books in it, also!) in Uganda. When I moved from Manhattan to the Brooklyn side, I finished his most famous piece, New York Trilogy (1985) - Auster's breakthrough book which is composed of three mini novels. Coincidences, double lives, obsessi

Tunteita ja totuuksia.

En tiennytkään, että osallistuin poliittisen elokuvan festivaaleille. Viime viikon aikana DocPoint -festivaalit täyttivät Helsingin elokuvateatterit, ja sekä työvuorojeni lomassa (olin toista kertaa peräkkäin vapaaehtoistyöntekijänä, nyt teatterivastaavana Bristolissa) että ehtiessäni niiden aikana onnistuin näkemään yhteensä 12 dokumenttielokuvaa, keskimäärin kolme päivässä. Festivaalilla esitetyt elokuvat heijastelivat tämän vuoden teemaa, joka oli "Totuus". On ymmärrettävää, että dokumentit herättävät jotenkin enemmän ärsytystä, tuohtumusta ja ahdistusta kuin tavalliset fiktioelokuvat. Ovathan ne, ainakin jollain lailla, "todempia": tunteet nousevat pintaan eri tavalla, kun tietää tuon kaiken tapahtuneen oikeasti, oikeille ihmisille. Samalla dokumentit ovat aina jonkun ihmisen - yleensä ohjaajan/käsikirjoittajan - näkemyksiä kuvatusta aiheesta. Kuinka ollakaan, monella katsojalla on eri käsityksiä asiasta, ja mitä kiistellympi aihe on, sitä varmemmin hän haluaa

Olé!

Olin eilen pitkästä aikaa katsomassa flamenco-tanssiesitystä. Edellinen kerta oli viime helmikuussa, jolloin ihan oikea espanjalainen tähti esiintyi Aleksanterin teatterissa. Eilen olin lähiössä, Kanneltalossa, ja hintakin oli opiskelijalle kohtuullinen, vain 10 euroa. Esityksen nimi oli "Rojo - punainen", koreografina Maija Lepistö , musisoimassa bändi La Pandilla ja tanssimassa 13 Lepistön oppilasta, jotka olivat harjoitelleet vuoden ajan erityisessä koulutusprojektissa - tuloksena tämä esitys. Eturivin paikka saattoi vaikuttaa siihen, että musiikki, tanssi ja tunnelma tempaisivat mukaansa. Vaikka tanssijoiden tekniikka ja koreografioiden vaativuus olivat - ymmärrettävistä syistä - eri luokkaa kuin viime vuonna näkemässäni teoksessa, olin todella otettu. Sen, mitä saattoi vielä puuttua teknisistä taidoista, tanssijat korvasivat tunteella. Seurasin tiiviimmin esiintyjien kasvoja kuin kantapäitä. Ilmeet ja tanssijoista huokuva asenne kertoivat enemmän kuin itse liikkeet; hei

Africa in New York

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Although I'm not physically in New York City anymore, I'll probably keep on writing about it a few more posts. The previous post implied that there is a niche for every possible country or culture in New York - that is the essence of that city. Being an Africanist, I 'had to' get acquainted with the African-ness of New York and found it in very different places, some by coincidence, some I was really looking after for. African Music Night at St. Nick's Pub 773 St. Nicholas Avenue at 149th st. (subway A to 145th st.) Review on Not-For-Tourists website ; somebody's blog entry on the night with some blurry photos; on the history of the pub on their website I spent my last night in New York, a Saturday night, in St. Nick's Pub. Mainly because I was exhausted after all the packing and going around Brooklyn, rushing through the last places I still wanted to see and didn't want to go somewhere two-hour subway-ride or an expensive cab-ride away. St. Nick's